View full sizeFatima Wright, principal at Stokes Academy in Cleveland, helps a frustrated student work through a test question. The school was using online mock tests to prepare the kids for the Ohio Achievement Assessments when the photo was taken in March 2011.Plain Dealer file

I have found it! After little thought and less reflection, I have found the answer to the problems of American public school education. Best of all, my solution will cost no money, save the taxpayers millions of dollars, and produce a well-educated citizenry. The solution is simple: eliminate any and all high-stakes proficiency testing and unleash the power of the teachers to do what they do best -- educate our children.

From the moment I was hired to teach history and government in the North Olmsted schools to the moment, years later, when I walked away, I had the audacity to believe that I had been hired for my expertise. I taught the entire range of students, seventh through 12th grades. No matter what the age or ability level, I actually believed that I had something to convey to my students and that I could truly refine thought and inspire learning. And why not? I graduated summa cum laude with a 4.0 GPA in two majors. I was already a published writer and had traveled extensively. Given those brazen assumptions, to me the textbook was a mere afterthought, a reference. State and district curriculums were only skeletons, and I would flesh them out. My students would learn through hundreds of pages of highly detailed learning packets that I wrote. I also created slide shows and, later on, PowerPoints, which dovetailed with the information contained in the packets. These tools formed the basis of class discussions, thus touching all the learning styles. The students read the packets, learned visually and learned orally. It did not stop there. Projects that I created became a hallmark for many of my classes. My students would write historical fiction along with modern and historical position papers. They would participate in "great debates," their own teaching projects, a historical magazine project and a world geographic magazine project. Last, there were the required reading books. Books such as "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee," "Son of the Morning Star," "The Prince" and "Treblinka" were read and thoroughly analyzed through lengthy class discussions.

My school system's finest superintendent was the one who refused to micromanage. He believed in something called "teacher empowerment." Educational excellence was not to be found in the ego par excellence of administrators, but in the abilities of the teachers. He made certain the lights were on and resources were available. The rest was up to us. Under that system, virtually nothing was off limits. We were free to create programs, design the curriculum and, above all, provide an intense instruction for the students. In the early 1980s, I became one of the founding fathers of our gifted and talented program. It soon became a lighthouse program inside a lighthouse school district. In that regard, I was certainly not the only one helping to create a first-class educational atmosphere. There was energy and excitement present in every building. The teachers competed with each other to design and offer only the best for our students. During those "empowerment" years, the district became a regional, state and national system of excellence, with the appropriate awards to prove it. And then came proficiency testing.

It came upon us slowly at first, as most evil does. States such as Florida and Texas had been applying the new methodology for a few years. Ohio would soon follow. We heard rumors, had a few discussions concerning what it all meant and merely wondered what impact, if any, the testing would have. We soon found out just how serious it all really was. We endured districtwide meetings where administrators admonished us as to the critical importance of these 50-question tests. Everything was going to ride upon student success or failure on these exams. Results were going to be published, levies would fail and jobs would be lost unless we scored well.

The meaning was truly driven home when a normally reticent assistant superintendent began jumping up and down on the stage while screaming into a microphone, "Ram it down their throats!"

She later apologized for the outburst, but the message was clear: Testing would direct the curriculum, dictate the programs and determine the future of our students and school district.

With apologies to T.S. Eliot, March, not April is the cruelest month, for March is the wasteland month of proficiencies. Early on in the experience, my project work and learning packets were barely altered. But it soon became apparent that cuts would have to be made in order to concentrate on preparing the students for the ultimate of tests. I complained bitterly to the administrators about this and was told: "Sorry, proficiencies drive the curriculum," and, "Cuts in programs and projects will have to be made. We're sorry."

"Sorry" is the cheapest word in the English language. "Consequence" is the most expensive.

I became a wizard at getting my students to pass the social studies section of the test. Every year until the time I left, I tracked the results for every student in my classes. Ninety-six percent was the lowest passing rate; 99 percent was the highest. In addition, the vast majority of my students achieved the accelerated or advanced levels as determined by the state standards. But the high scores my students achieved merely disguised the consequences. While so assiduously preparing them for the arithmetical triumph, historical fiction, the teaching project and the world geographic magazine project were discarded. As the testing became tougher and even more intense, many of my other projects became mere relics of a bygone era. None of the projects I created pertained to the testing, and the time needed for them had to be used for proficiency-oriented curriculum and test preparation. The required reading books vanished as well. Over time, only "The Prince" remained.

Leaving learning behind The 21st century delivered yet another hammer stroke. I recall hearing our "education" president, George W. Bush, declare that "rarely is the question asked, 'is our children learning?' " and, "It's the systems that don't test are those that quit on the kids." His words signaled our nation's educational future. Fittingly, they were uttered by a man who has never possessed a known first language. Whatever the vagaries of his dialect, the meaning could not be lost in translation. The federal government, through No Child (or testing company) Left Behind, would be actively involved, and the states would be expected to take high-stakes testing even higher.

In Ohio, the old-style proficiency exam was replaced with an even tougher one: the Ohio Graduation Test (OGT). Statewide, schools were scoring extremely well on the old test and the state decided to create a more challenging high-stakes exam in keeping with the federal mandates. In my classes, I was barely able to keep two projects alive: the historical magazine project and a new book review project I created. The latter was a rather pedestrian exercise, but at least my students would be required to read an outside history book on a topic of their choosing. As for "The Prince," he died in 2002.

I was certainly not alone in all this. The testing claimed its victims throughout the district. At the middle school level, for example, the gifted and talented program and foreign languages were reduced or eliminated. Indeed, virtually every program throughout the system suffered in one way or another as we focused on the terrible arithmetic.

Over the past decade, the nightmare of testing became even more intense and with predictable results. It wasn't long until politicians demanded that teachers be held accountable for test scores. In district after district, state after state, proficiency scores and teachers' careers were being inextricably linked. In states where testing meant everything to everyone involved, scores began to rise, then soar, almost overnight. Even the most cursory investigations found rampant cheating. The much-heralded "Texas miracle" on test scores proved to be no miracle at all as cheating scandals dominated the headlines. The Dallas Morning News claimed to have discovered 50,000 cases of cheating on the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills test in 2005-2006. Seven hundred districts found themselves under investigation. Investigations in Georgia found an epidemic of cheating on their high-stakes exam. In Atlanta, nearly half of the city's school districts were involved in fraudulent test scores. At least 178 teachers and principals have been implicated. Similar patterns of fraud have been uncovered nationwide.

Data's darling Warrior Woman, Tiger Mom and former Empress of the Washington D.C. Public Schools Michelle Rhee became the darling of the data-driven crowd. She came to teaching through the Teach for America program. As a teacher, she once killed and ate a bee in front of her class just to demonstrate her toughness. On another occasion, to keep her students quiet, she taped their mouths shut. With all that on her resume, she was well suited for the era of proficiency testing. In 2007, with no prior experience in running a school system, but with plenty of self-righteousness, she descended upon the D.C. schools as their new Chancellor/Queen.

Rhee used the carrot and club approach. Raise the test scores and receive thousands of dollars in bonuses, or lose your job. She meant what she said. Teachers and principals were axed with monotonous regularity. Rhee once publicly fired a principal during the filming of a PBS NewsHour report on her. John Merrow and the film crew were stunned by what they recorded. Nevertheless, under Rhee, test scores rocketed and bonuses flowed to those who succeeded in raising them. In 2010, she abdicated her position after taking the D.C. schools to the statistical stratosphere, and then came the deluge. Independent investigations into those scores uncovered statistical impossibilities. So many multiple-choice answers had been changed from wrong to right that USA Today placed the odds of that occurring by chance at 1 in 100 billion. In spite of the data, cheating was flatly denied by Rhee and her cohorts. If we choose to assume that the erasures were honestly performed by the students, we can come to one and only one conclusion: The students of the D.C. schools are, without question, Powerball ready. As to their proficiency in the core subjects tested, the jury is still out -- way out.

I never questioned the results of my school's test scores. We consistently scored well, very well. More to the real point, our test security would have impressed the Secret Service. On OGT, for example, we were not allowed to proctor our own subject matter. When we did monitor, it was a team effort. We watched the students, and each other. We weren't even allowed to touch the tests. When the students finished, a third party entered the room, collected the tests, placed them in a locking valise and delivered the material to the guidance office. They were then gathered together and shipped off to the state for grading. In addition, our evaluations and our very jobs were never linked to student test scores. No bonuses were offered for increasing test results, either. Thus, the greatest incentives to cheat were never present. We all knew the importance of scoring well, but the desperation to commit fraud was simply not there. Given all the factors, I have every confidence that our scores were always real.

But test scores for any school, real or not, camouflage the true crime. I never feared proficiency testing. Instead, I loathed it. Proficiencies forced me to eviscerate the very elements that gave students a meaningful, vital, life-long learning experience. Distilling education into a number through high-stakes testing is nothing more than a fan dance in a corporate burlesque show. People become the equal of commodities; students are thereby converted into the widgets of our nation. Such is the price of oafdom.

Joining the Common Core Ohio will soon gut the OGT exams and will join 44 other states in administering the Common Core tests. It is a distinction without a difference. Core testing is merely the flip side of the same cruel coin and will offer the same educationally decrepit results. I would rather place my faith in the educational judgment of people like those brave teachers who laid down their lives protecting their students in Newtown, Conn., than in having to obey a gang of bloodless bureaucrats crunching numbers. Their high-stakes obsessions are fishhooks in our flesh. To paraphrase Kierkegaard, "life must be lived forward, but it can only be understood backward." I saw the before and I endured the after. If we are to live forward, then the solution is simple: We must rid ourselves of proficiency testing and let the teachers teach.

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